We won because the British people did not trust Ed Miliband to manage the economy

and so it is unbelievable now to see the Labour party has been piratically captured

in a kind of social media twitstorm by what Harold Wilson once called a small group of politically motivated men

and I know these people, my friends

they are the London Labour party

trots and militants with vested interests and indeed interesting vests

They are the people who idolise Hugo Chavez and toast the revolution in taxpayer funded vintage burgundy

and I know them because we have fought and beaten them twice

and the reason I first wanted to get into that fight eight years ago is that I am fundamentally opposed to that style of politics

They have the same ruthless methods as the old colonialists that they purport to despise

in that they believe in divide and rule

Where there is a grievance, they foment it; where there is sectarianism, they take sides

Where there are racial or religious or ethnic divisions their instinct is always to play them up

And of course there is one conflict they relish above all others, and that is economic class war

the belief that you can exalt the poor and the needy by bashing the wealth creators

imposing punitive taxation

and in the words of John Macdonnell, an avowed Marxist who is seriously putting himself forward as the man to run the economy

fermenting – sic – the destruction of capitalism

and I know there is a generation of young people

who can't remember communism and

who think it might be a good idea to ferment anti-capitalism as if it were some fruity alcopop

and so I say to all those £3 corbynistas – we tried that;

We tried fermenting anti-capitalism in the soviet union; we have tried brewing it in Britain in the 1970s and in many other parts of the world

and the result has been the kind of toxic moonshine that sends you blind

give that hooch a miss

We don't believe in destroying capitalism

because for all its faults capitalism is the best means humanity has yet found of satisfying our wants and needs

We believe in using capitalism to deliver social and economic progress

and we do it in a one nation way – by bringing people together

and I hesitate to return to the rugby but I am afraid there is a lesson in that agonizing match at Twickenham the other night

and I speak as someone whose happiest formative afternoons were spent as a tight head prop – the guy on the right

and apart from grunting and heaving the crucial thing you have to do as a tight head – in fact just about the only thing you have to do apart from grunting and trying to stop the other guy sticking his fingers up your nose

is to bind on tightly and correctly – in my case to the hooker

(insert joke here, as Jeremy Corbyn's autocue would say)

and it is the rugby scrum that provides a metaphor for my political beliefs

because our lives are really a gigantic collective effort

in which one person's bulk makes up for another person's slightness of stature

and where everyone is so tightly bound together that one person's forward progress drives another person's forward progress

and that is the society we need – not just a big society, but a united society

where the different elements are bound together by an irreducible set of values

democracy and freedom and equality under the law

and let no one say these ideas are trite, or trivial

– not in a Britain where men and women are now being segregated at university societies and where

young girls are suffering the abomination of female genital mutilation

and I applaud those two fantastic London MPs Justine Greening and Jane Ellison for their campaign against a vice that has been tolerated for too long in the name of political correctness

I want a Britain united by command of the English language

When I meet people who have been here for decades – very often women - without learning this essential tool of economic participation

I think it is not just a failure to integrate but a kind of oppression

the logical consequence of the politically correct multicultural loony-ism of the left

and if dear Jezza is wondering whether to sing the national anthem

can I recommend that he comes to City Hall for our annual citizenship ceremony

where people from around the world queue to have a selfie – not with me, but with a picture on an easel

of the queen

not because of who she is or what she has done in the last 63 years – extraordinary record of service though that is

but because of what she represents – the continuity of the great free institutions of this country

the ideas that she incarnates:

of our democracy and of the sovereignty of the crown in parliament

and if people are to be loyal to those ideas

then it is vital that our democracy is healthy, and vibrant, and truly representative

and that means getting the right deal now from our EU partners

as I know David Cameron can

helping to restore trust in parliament by making sure that new laws affecting the British public are made by people the British public can kick out at elections

and it should be up to this parliament and this country – not to Jean-Claude Juncker – to decide if too many people are coming here

because it is not that we object to immigration in itself – I speak as the proud great grandson of a Turk who fled his country in fear of his life

to Wimbledon for some reason

(and who was then assassinated by his political opponents – a fate I intend to avoid)

It is about who decides; it is about who is ultimately responsible; it is about control

and you will loosen the bonds that should unite society if people feel that their elected politicians have abdicated their ability to control those things that ought frankly to be within their power

And when you look at what is happening in Greece, where economic independence is being sacrificed on the altar of the euro

you could not say that democracy in Europe was in good health

and we should be sticking up for it, as we have in the last hundred years because those are our values shared language,

These are the ties that unite our society – and yet they are not powerful enough on their own

if the economic gap between us is allowed to grow too big

and even though I am still just about the only politician to speak out in favour of bankers

I say we one nation Tories cannot ignore the gulf in pay packets that yawns wider year by year

In 1980 a chief executive of a FTSE 100 company earned about 25 times the average pay – the average pay – of his or her employees

What do you think the multiple is today? 130 times; and there are some who pay themselves 780 times

and again I believe that people will accept this, but only on certain conditions

only if they feel that this dynamic, entrepreneurial, high-reward capitalist system is actually helping to take everyone forward...

We will accept it

if and only if they pay their taxes – rich corporations and individuals

if and only if those firms are paying their employees decently – and it is great that a giant retailer like Lidl is paying not just the minimum wage but the London Living Wage

and we must ensure that as we reform welfare and we cut taxes that we protect the hardest working and lowest paid

the retail staff, the cleaners, who get up in the small hours or work through the night because they have dreams for what their families can achieve

the people without whom the London economy would simply collapse

the aspiring, striving, working people that Labour is leaving behind

and then there is an even more important requirement

If people are to feel bound in to this united society there must be opportunity

and it is the Tory policies

on housing – more new homes now being built in London than in any year for 35 years

on transport – the biggest programme of infrastructure since queen Victoria

on education – the schools revolution epitomised by Katharine Birbalsingh's amazing times-table spouting and Shakespeare reciting school in Brent

that are creating opportunity...

Take those policies together with our natural instincts to cut taxes, cut red tape, to help business and enterprise

and you can see why there has been a jobs boom in London, with youth unemployment at its lowest level for 25 years

and 400,000 people lifted out of poverty in London since I have been Mayor

and the point I make to our crusty friends outside is that it is actually sensible one nation policies in London have been disproportionately beneficial for the poorest

If crime hits the poorest hardest – and it does - then it follows that is the poor who have most to gain from falls in crime

If you are poor in London, you are more likely to send your kids to a school where the air is polluted

if you are poor, your kids are 40 per cent more likely to die or be seriously injured in a road traffic accident

if you are poor your kids are far more likely to die in a domestic fire

and so if you reduce all those evils as we have, in the last eight years

– crime down almost 20 per cent,

– murder rate down 50 per cent,

– air pollution down 20 pc for NOX and 15 pc for particulates,

– deaths on the road down 40 per cent,

– deaths from fire down 50 per cent

then you are doing something for fairness and for social justice

and let me give you this final knock-out point, for all those who think inequality has increased

there is one simple way in which we have a more united society – and that is in our ability to spend more time on this earth in good health with our families

just since I have been mayor, life expectancy has gone up in London by 18 months for women and 19 months for men –

and there are parts of the Harrow Road where life expectancy at birth is now 97

I don't know what monkey glands or royal jelly they apply in the Harrow road but

you live longer under the Tories, my friends

and yet the most extraordinary and counter-intuitive statistic is that it is the poorest who are seeing the biggest gains, so that the gap in average life expectancy between rich and poor has diminished from about five years when I became mayor to about 3 years today

and of course it is disgraceful that there is still a gap at all; but that is social justice, that is progress

that is what we are fighting for

I am immensely proud of what has been achieved in the last seven and a half years under a Tory mayoralty

and I thank my brilliant and indomitable team, so many of whom are here in this hall led by my irrepressible chief of staff sir Edward lister

3 of them now my fellow MPs – Kit, Victoria, James

we began with a financial crisis that many people said would knock London off its perch as the world's financial capital

and we come to the final furlongs with London the number one capital for banking, for bioscience, for media, for culture, for theatre

and with our capital installed for the second year running the world's top tourist destination with 18.8m international visitors , knocking Paris and New York off the number one spot

the world's most popular city – under the Conservatives

We have upgraded the tube so massively that it is carrying 25 per cent more passengers than when I was elected - every day

and that is because we have cut delays by more than 50 per cent

we are delivering Crossrail on time and on budget, the biggest engineering project in Europe

we have not only staged the world's greatest ever Olympic games but we have secured a sensational physical legacy at the Olympic park in Stratford

so that London is now the only Olympic city to have found a long term private sector future for all 7 sporting venues

to say nothing of the new V and A and the first ever Smithsonian museum outside the USA;

Around the clock from Old Oak to Enfield to Stratford to Greenwich to Croydon to Battersea we are seeing this city rebuilt and regenerated on a scale not achieved for centuries

and we are doing it in a way that is sensitive to the environment and that improves quality of life

we have introduced new bikes and cleaner buses; we have got 100s of 1000s of Londoners volunteering through Team London; and they are mentoring kids and planting thousands of trees

and in spite of this frenzy of activity we done the Tory thing

we have cut council tax by 27 per cent

and it is wonderful now to see the London agenda being rolled out across the country

- fiscal devolution, with our great English cities free to spend the business rates they raise